Cyrenaica
Terracottasis an interactive web site designed for
archaeologists, art historians, historians, and classicists
who have an interest in the typological diffusion of Greek
terracottas at ancient sites in Cyrenaica, Libya, as well
as elsewhere around the Greek world.

Updated May 30, 2017

This project focuses on
the digital presentation of the Greek votive terracottas brought to light at
the Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone in the
Wadi Bel Gadir at Cyrene, Libya, by the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania from 1969 to 1979 (see above). This has lead to the inclusion of other corpora of terracottas, including those from Cyrene's Artemision and the sanctuary of the Chthonic Nymphs, as well as from the site of Apollonia.

While terracotta
figurines have been found at Cyrene's Artemision, theater,
agora, so-called Temple of the Divinity of Fecundity, Temple
of Demeter, Sanctuary of the Chthonic Nymphs, and in tombs
from Cyrene's necropoleis, those from the Extramural Sanctuary
of Demeter and Persephone represent the largest extant corpus
of figurines found to date anywhere in Cyrenaica. They complement
the figurines discovered outside of Cyrene, at Tocra, Apollonia, Benghazi, Eusperides,
El Gubba, and Budrasc, but far exceed these in number.

A note on the photography.
All the images for the terracottas from the Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene have been scanned from the original black and white negatives that were made during the course of the 1969 to 1979 campaigns. No subsequent photographic documentation has been possible.